Outline

Material and Methods: We used German national health surveys (1990-92 and 1998, n= 7,466 and 5,583, age 25-69 years) to estimate obesity prevalences and its associations with calendar year, age (25-39, 40-60, 60-69), and educational level (low, middle, high), as well as an interaction term (year*educational level) in men and women. We used multiple regression models, considering the sample design.

Results: Obesity prevalence in 1990 and 1998 was 18.1 (95% CI 16.5-19.7) and 19.9 (18.2-21.6) in men and 20.9 (19.2-22.6) and 21.6 (19.3-23.7) in women, with statistically significantly higher prevalences in higher age and lower education. A statistically significant increase of obesity prevalence was present only in men. The increase seems to be highest in high educated educated subjects. However, interaction was not statistically significant, except in middle compared to high educated men (OR 0.67; 0.47-0.96).

Conclusions: Obesity prevalence increased only moderately in Germany between 1990-92 and 1998. There was a tendency of reduction of the social gradient in obesity instead of a widening.